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  • 2020-2022  (3)
  • 2010-2014  (5)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-01-08
    Description: Warming air temperatures, shifting hydrological regimes and accelerating permafrost thaw in the catchments of the Arctic rivers is affecting their biogeochemistry. Arctic river monitoring is necessary to observe changes in the mobilization of dissolved organic matter (DOM) from permafrost. The Lena River is the second largest Arctic river and 71% of its catchment is continuous permafrost. Biogeochemical parameters, including temperature, electrical conductivity (EC), stable water isotopes, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and absorption by colored dissolved organic matter (aCDOM) have been measured as part of a new high-frequency sampling program in the central Lena River Delta. The results show strong seasonal variations of all biogeochemical parameters that generally follow seasonal patterns of the hydrograph. Optical indices of DOM indicate a trend of decreasing aromaticity and molecular weight from spring to winter. High-frequency sampling improved our estimated annual fluvial flux of annual dissolved organic carbon flux (6.79 Tg C). EC and stable isotope data were used to distinguish three different source water types which explain most of the seasonal variation in the biogeochemistry of the Lena River. These water types match signatures of (1) melt water, (2) rain water, and (3) subsurface water. Melt water and rain water accounted for 84% of the discharge flux and 86% of the DOC flux. The optical properties of melt water DOM were characteristic of fresh organic matter. In contrast, the optical properties of DOM in subsurface water revealed lower aromaticity and lower molecular weights, which indicate a shift toward an older organic matter source mobilized from deeper soil horizons or permafrost deposits. The first year of this new sampling program sets a new baseline for flux calculations of dissolved matter and has enabled the identification and characterization of water types that drive the seasonality of the Lena River water properties.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Keywords: Amphidinium sphenoides, biomass as carbon; Amphidinium sphenoides, standard deviation; Chaetoceros spp., biomass as carbon; Chaetoceros spp., standard deviation; Ciliates, biomass as carbon; Ciliates, standard deviation; CTD, Seacat; CTD-S; Dana10_GF10bis; Dana10_GF11_1; Dana10_K2_1; Dana10_K4_1; Dana10/1; Dana II; Date/Time of event; DEPTH, water; Diatoms, centrales, biomass as carbon; Diatoms, pennales, biomass as carbon; Diatoms, standard deviation; Dinobryon spp., biomass as carbon; Dinobryon spp., standard deviation; Dinoflagellates, biomass as carbon; Dinoflagellates, standard deviation; Dinophysis spp., biomass as carbon; Dinophysis spp., standard deviation; Event label; Godthåbsfjord, West Greenland; Gyrodinium spp., biomass as carbon; Gyrodinium spp., standard deviation; Kapisigdlit, West Greenland; Katodinium glaucum, biomass as carbon; Katodinium glaucum, standard deviation; Laboea strobila, biomass as carbon; Laboea strobila, standard deviation; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Nanoflagellates, biomass as carbon; Nanoflagellates, standard deviation; Phaeocystis sp., biomass as carbon; Phaeocystis sp., standard deviation; Protoperidinium spp., biomass as carbon; Protoperidinium spp., standard deviation; Pseudo-nitzschia spp., biomass as carbon; Pseudo-nitzschia spp., standard deviation; Strombidium spp., biomass as carbon; Strombidium spp., standard deviation; Thalassiosira spp., biomass as carbon; Thalassiosira spp., standard deviation; Tintinnid, biomass as carbon; Tintinnid, standard deviation; Torodinium robustum, biomass as carbon; Torodinium robustum, standard deviation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 168 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-07-11
    Keywords: CTD, Seacat; CTD-S; Dana10_FB2_1; Dana10_FB3.5_1; Dana10_GF1_1; Dana10_GF10_1; Dana10_GF10bis; Dana10_GF11_1; Dana10_GF2_1; Dana10_GF3_1; Dana10_GF6_1; Dana10_K2_1; Dana10_K4_1; Dana10/1; Dana II; Event label; Feeding experiment; FX; Fyllas Banke, West Greenland; Godthåbsfjord, West Greenland; Kapisigdlit, West Greenland; Method comment; Mortality; Number; Phytoplankton growth rate; Primary production of chlorophyll a per day; Primary production removed/grazed; Size fraction; Station label
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 138 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-07-11
    Keywords: CTD, Seacat; CTD-S; Dana10_GF11_1; Dana10_GF6_1; Dana10_K2_1; Dana10/1; Dana II; Event label; Feeding experiment; FX; Godthåbsfjord, West Greenland; Kapisigdlit, West Greenland; Mortality; Number; Phytoplankton growth rate; Size fraction; Station label
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 14 data points
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Calbet, Albert; Riisgaard, Karen; Saiz, Enric; Zamora, Sara; Stedmon, Colin A; Nielsen, Torkel Gissel (2011): Phytoplankton growth and microzooplankton grazing along a sub-Arctic fjord (Godthabsfjord, west Greenland). Marine Ecology Progress Series, 442, 11-22, https://doi.org/10.3354/meps09343
    Publication Date: 2023-12-13
    Description: We evaluated the role of microzooplankton (sensu latto, grazers 〈500 µm) in determining the fate of phytoplankton production (PP) along a glacier-to-open sea transect in the Greenland subarctic fjord, Godthabfjord. Based on the distribution of size fractionated chlorophyll a (chl a) concentrations we established 4 zones: (1) Fyllas Bank, characterized by deep chl a maxima (ca. 30 to 40 m) consisting of large cells, (2) the mouth and main branch of the fjord, where phytoplankton was relatively homogeneously distributed in the upper 30 m layer, (3) inner waters influenced by glacial melt water and upwelling, with high chl a concentrations (up to 12 µg/l) in the 〉10 µm fraction within a narrow (2 m) subsurface layer, and (4) the Kapisigdlit branch of the fjord, ice-free, and characterized with a thick and deep chl a maximum layer. Overall, microzooplankton grazing impact on primary production was variable and seldom significant in the Fyllas Bank and mouth of the fjord, quite intensive (up to 〉100% potential PP consumed daily) in the middle part of the main and Kapisigdlit branches of the fjord, and rather low and unable to control the fast growing phytoplankton population inhabiting the nutrient rich waters in the upwelling area in the vicinity of the glacier. Most of the grazing impact was on the 〈10 µm phytoplankton fraction, and the major grazers of the system seem to be 〉20 µm microzooplankton, as deducted from additional dilution experiments removing this size fraction. Overall, little or no export of phytoplankton out of the fjord to the Fyllas Bank can be determined from our data.
    Keywords: International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This study investigated the incorporation of DOM from seawater into 〉2 day-old sea ice in tanks filled with seawater alone or amended with DOM extracted from the microalga, Chlorella vulgaris. Optical properties, including chromophoric DOM (CDOM) absorption and fluorescence, as well as concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), dissolved carbohydrates (dCHOs) and dissolved uronic acids (dUAs) were measured. Enrichment factors (EFs), calculated from salinity-normalized concentrations of DOM in bulk ice, brine and frost flowers relative to under-ice water, were generally 〉1. The enrichment factors varied for different DOM fractions: EFs were the lowest for humic-like DOM (1.0–1.39) and highest for amino acid-like DOM (1.10–3.94). Enrichment was generally highest in frost flowers with there being less enrichment in bulk ice and brine. Size exclusion chromatography indicated that there was a shift towards smaller molecules in the molecular size distribution of DOM in the samples collected from newly formed ice compared to seawater. Spectral slope coefficients did not reveal any consistent differences between seawater and ice samples. We conclude that DOM is incorporated to sea ice relatively more than inorganic solutes during initial formation of sea ice and the degree of the enrichment depends on the chemical composition of DOM
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2021-12-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-12-21
    Description: The Arctic Ocean receives a large supply of dissolved organic matter (DOM) from its catchment and shelf sediments, which can be traced across much of the basin's upper waters. This signature can potentially be used as a tracer. On the shelf, the combination of river discharge and sea-ice formation, modifies water densities and mixing considerably. These waters are a source of the halocline layer that covers much of the Arctic Ocean, but also contain elevated levels of DOM. Here we demonstrate how this can be used as a supplementary tracer and contribute to evaluating ocean circulation in the Arctic. A fraction of the organic compounds that DOM consists of fluoresce and can be measured using in-situ fluorometers. When deployed on autonomous platforms these provide high temporal and spatial resolution measurements over long periods. The results of an analysis of data derived from several Ice Tethered Profilers (ITPs) offer a unique spatial coverage of the distribution of DOM in the surface 800 m below Arctic sea-ice. Water mass analysis using temperature, salinity and DOM fluorescence, can clearly distinguish between the contribution of Siberian terrestrial DOM and marine DOM from the Chukchi shelf to the waters of the halocline. The findings offer a new approach to trace the distribution of Pacific waters and its export from the Arctic Ocean. Our results indicate the potential to extend the approach to separate freshwater contributions from, sea-ice melt, riverine discharge and the Pacific Ocean.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , peerRev
    Format: application/pdf
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